Peter Rainer
Select another critic »For 2,765 reviews, this critic has graded:
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53% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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45% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Peter Rainer's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Summer of Soul (...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) | |
| Lowest review score: | Mixed Nuts | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,744 out of 2765
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Mixed: 866 out of 2765
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Negative: 155 out of 2765
2765
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Peter Rainer
I don’t believe I’ve ever seen a movie that better conveys the sheer passion both performer and listener have for great music.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 13, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The result is more of an illustrated storybook of a cherished classic than a living thing in its own right.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 13, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The film targets the spinmeisters, hired by or associated with corporate interests, whose job, despite their lack of scientific training, is to discredit the science of climate change doomsayers. The fact that some of these spinmeisters proudly base their method on the machinations of tobacco-industry lobbyists is doubly damning.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 6, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
If Hollywood must have franchises, we could do worse than one highlighting people who have lived a long life and are not on altogether friendly terms with technology. But imagine what this cast could do with something less tutti-frutti!- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 6, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
For western fans, watching this movie is like encountering an old friend after a long absence.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 27, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Within its limited compass, ’71 packs a punch, and the lack of political bias does give it a more encompassing feel.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 27, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
This is the kind of movie where we’re not supposed to know at any time who is playing whom, but since the characterizations are glossy and paper-thin, it’s difficult to get worked up about who gets fleeced.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 27, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The saving grace of Queen and Country is that its nostalgia is not laced with sentimentality. Even working in this conventional mode, Boorman doesn’t try to strong-arm us into blubberiness.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 20, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
If you’ve ever fantasized about busting up somebody’s nuptials, this movie is for you.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 20, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The fact that it's based on a true story doesn't alter the fact that, like most such Hollywood movies, it seems fabricated.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 20, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Essentially a Harlequin Romance with pulleys, E.L. James’s novel is not exactly “Lady Chatterley’s Lover,” but the movie, directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson and written by Kelly Marcel takes itself so seriously that it almost cries out to be lampooned. I’m sure the “Saturday Night Live” crew is already on the case.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 12, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Sissako, a Muslim, frames his story as a cry against religious intolerance. One of the characters, speaking of jihadism, says, “Where is piety? Where is God in all this?” It is the central question of this movie – and of much more now than this movie.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 6, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
I suppose the relationship is Oedipal or primal or something or other, but mostly it’s just an excuse for Dolan to stage a series of gaudy shout-fests.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 6, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
I enjoyed this movie more than the last two films from the Wachowskis, the interminable "Cloud Atlas" and "Speed Racer." On the other hand, "The Matrix" it's not.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 6, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Audiences knowing nothing about hockey will still be able to appreciate this movie as a somewhat jaunty take on the cold war and its aftermath – and resurgence. A curious kind of cold-war nostalgia can be felt in the West these days; President Vladimir Putin is the kind of comprehensible villain Americans feel comfortable with.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 30, 2015
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 30, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Winter Sleep, winner of last year’s Palme d’Or in Cannes, runs almost 3-1/2 hours. These will be some of the best three-plus hours you will spend at any movie this year. I’ve seen movies half that length that felt twice as long.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 23, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
One of those movies designed as an Oscar make-over for its star. It didn’t work in this case. Aniston was not nominated for Best Actress, perhaps because the film is so obvious about what it’s up to.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 23, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Pacino still gets a blast out of acting. His performance in this film about a blocked performer is gloriously unblocked – a valentine to vanity.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 16, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Watching actors tap out code as big buzzing screens of digital data flash on the screen just doesn’t cut it.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 16, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The plot may be a bit too busy, but a great wash of transcendent imagery floods the screen. If I had to recommend the best children’s film out there for all ages, this one, and “The Tale of Princess Kaguya,” would easily top the charts.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 9, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
In a series of deft vignettes, the Dardennes offer up a microcosm of an entire working-class contingent, and each vignette is a universe all to itself.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 9, 2015
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 3, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
It’s a gangster movie that tries to be more than that, not always successfully. In his own small-scale way, Chandor wants to expand the reach of his vision to “Godfather” status, with Abel as his shining (tainted) knight.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 3, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The best thing about the movie is David Oyelowo’s performance as King. He doesn’t simply portray King; he inhabits him.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
We’re left with an enigma that is insufficiently probed: How does art this banal nevertheless capture us?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Clint Eastwood’s second film this year, American Sniper, about the late Navy SEAL Chris Kyle, is considerably better than his first, “The Jersey Boys.” As a piece of direction, it’s as taut as anything he’s ever done.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Zamperini’s life story is genuinely inspirational, but the movie seems fashioned as a standard-issue profile in courage, with Zamperini, after a troubled youth, transformed into an almost saintlike figure. He would have been every bit as inspirational, even more so, without the halo.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Although its first hour is more stunning than its second, this is a movie musical that, for a change, never degenerates into a false wholesomeness. It’s one of the rare musicals that both children and adults can enjoy, though for somewhat different reasons.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 24, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 19, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Even if the film were sharper, even if it was made by satirists on the order of Stanley Kubrick and Terry Southern in their “Dr. Strangelove” days, I would still argue that greenlighting such a film is a blunder. The exercise of free speech does not exempt one from the consequences of stupidity.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 19, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Considering this musical has its roots in Depression-era American, Gluck’s contemporary take on the material is eerily lacking in observations about the rich/poor divide in this country.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 19, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
A kind of companion piece to Altman’s “The Long Goodbye,” and it’s the sort of failure that only a director (Paul Thomas Anderson) of his talents could make – a movie about a stoner private eye (Joaquin Phoenix) in Los Angeles circa 1970 that seems to have been concocted in a stoned haze of its very own.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 12, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
For an ostensibly soul-deep movie like this to work, we need more than smirks and scowls.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 12, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
When we last see a much older Moses en route to Canaan, we can at least be grateful that this film, unlike so many other movies these days, does not seem primed for a sequel.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 12, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 5, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Too much of Wild is broken up by flashbacks that tend to dissipate rather than enhance Strayed’s trek. At times she is swallowed up almost to the point of vanishing by the immensity of the vistas.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 4, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Frederick Wiseman’s documentary National Gallery is for art lovers, movie lovers – basically for anybody. Ostensibly a film about London’s famous museum, it’s really about the experience of art in all its manifestations.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 21, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
This delicate, hand-drawn marvel is lyrical and heartbreaking in ways that most live-action movies never approach.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 21, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
As it is, “Mockingjay,” a big bore, suffers from being the transitional event before the big showdown.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 20, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I must say I felt relieved that the film wasn’t a masterpiece. If it was, we’d have more reason to fear Stewart will leave "The Daily Show.”- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 14, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The story is so powerfully observed that it does indeed become larger than itself – an American tragedy.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 14, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Highly uneven, but at least it doesn’t glamorize Hawking’s life or turn it into a paean to endurance.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 7, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Nolan tries to pair the cosmic esoterica with this father-daughter tussle, but the mix doesn't jell. Visionary movies require a bigger vision.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 4, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Jesse Moss’s documentary The Overnighters is being hailed as a modern-day “Grapes of Wrath,” which, up to a point, it is. But it’s far more complicated than that.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 31, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
By turning the loner Louis into a nutcase – if he blinked at all during the movie, I missed it – the movie becomes a species of horror film.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 31, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Laggies itself isn’t exactly slow – its pace is pleasantly meandering – and it’s far from aimless, although what it’s aiming for isn’t always clear.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The larger point in Citizenfour is that dictatorships have always relied on the massive gathering of information in order to control their populations. In this brave new cyber world, it is all too easy for democracies to cross the line, too.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Force Majeure is ultimately about something not often explored in film: the consequences of male weakness in a world in which men are expected to be strong at all times.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Edet Belzberg’s documentary Watchers of the Sky, which was a decade in the making, reclaims the reputation of Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Holocaust refugee who not only coined the term “genocide” but also invented the concept of categorizing mass murder as an international crime.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 17, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Since we all know that Paris wasn’t blown to smithereens, the tension here is not in the outcome but in how it was achieved. The meeting between these two men is largely fictional, but the stakes could not have been more real.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 17, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Brad Pitt gives one of his best performances as Sgt. Don “Wardaddy” Collier, a tank commander with a passion for killing Nazis.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 17, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
A movie with ambitions as high-flying as its superhero but a success rate decidedly lower to the ground.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 16, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Schmaltz this thick requires a director who can at least make us feel that our tears are not being shamelessly jerked. But St. Vincent is too clunky to hide its tear-slicked tracks. Maybe that’s a good thing. At least that’s more endearing than being worked over by a smooth operator who knows exactly which buttons to press.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 10, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I don’t get the enthusiasm for this movie, written and directed by Damien Chazelle, which is such a cooked-up piece of claptrap that I half expected Darth Vader to pick up the baton. We’re supposed to think that Terence’s tough love is more “honest” than the usual pussyfooting tutelage, but in any sane society this guy would have been brought up on charges long ago.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 10, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
What hits home is Renner’s performance, which gives full weight both to Webb’s fierce, abiding love for journalism and his despair when his livelihood – his reason for being – is trashed. It’s a tragedy, doubly so since the core of Webb’s allegations remains unchallenged today.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 10, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
There is nothing surprising about the way this overlong movie, written and directed by David Dobkin, plays itself out.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 10, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Himmler in one of his letters says that “in life, one must be always decent, courageous and kind-hearted,” and “decent” is apparently how he saw himself right up to the time he swallowed a cyanide capsule after he was captured by the British.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 3, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Since music is so much more than music between these two, their filmed sessions resemble not so much rehearsals as communions.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 3, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Amalric throws in flashbacks and flash-forwards between bedroom and courthouse (yes, there’s a murder), and I was reminded again why I prefer my noirs in the hardboiled American style rather than tricked up with all this faux Alain Resnais-style filigree.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 3, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
A few of the supporting players, including Kim Dickens, as a suspicious local cop, and Carrie Coon, as Nick’s twin sister, move beyond the formulaic, which is more than can be said for the movie.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 3, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
This is a kid’s fantasy of how to be bigger and badder than anybody else. As for Washington, no doubt he now has his very own franchise.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 26, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
What we have here is a perhaps unanswerable enigma of the sort all too common in the annals of spying.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 19, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Myers, whose background is in documentaries involving Afghanistan and Iraq War vets, is good at capturing the revealing, offhand moments in this story, but Maggie’s conflicts about motherhood and the military needed a greater psychological scope than this film provides.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 19, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The material veers a bit too predictably from near farce to serioso dramatics but the trajectory here makes emotional sense.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 12, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Whatever the case, the film resounds with hyperbolic passion. Hot bubbling currents flow through this film’s constricted veins.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 5, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 5, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The implicit question overhanging the film: Is the political impetus to present only “positive” imagery of black people an injustice to the fullest range of their experience?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 29, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
In the name of unblinking realism, Szász overdoes the allegory. There are no sacrificial gestures here, no heroism, no tears. He comes on as truth-teller, but he’s only telling half the truth.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 29, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Michael Winterbottom, who also directed “The Trip,” is known for his avant-garde cinematic ways, but with these films he wisely sets down the camera and for the most part lets the actors play out their improvs.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 22, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The living-apart scenario is contrived – there was no way for these men to share a space somewhere? – but the two actors are so good that it doesn’t much matter.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 22, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The trouble with pet projects is that too often they are unduly do-goody, and so it is here.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 15, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Cameron, tall and lanky, fitted himself into the podlike chamber and dropped seven miles to the ocean floor. Although he didn’t encounter anything other than barrenness, he did bring back to the surface 100 new species of microorganisms. I hope National Geographic appreciates the effort.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 8, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I wish the movie weren’t quite so sappy about the spiritually redemptive powers of fine cuisine. Sometimes a meal is just a meal.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 8, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Radcliffe and Kazan have a nice nerds-in-clover rapport. If only the movie wasn’t so satisfied with how cute it is.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 8, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
There is no law requiring a biopic to make “nice” with its subject, but Get On Up, which presents Brown almost entirely unflatteringly except as a performer, makes you wonder why the filmmakers (including Mick Jagger, one of its producers) took the trouble.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 1, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I’ve never seen a better performance – or whatever you want to call it – from a two-year-old.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 1, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Gleeson is a wonderful actor and he keeps a lid on the blarney. He manages to convey a lot – fear, anger, compassion, rue – with only the slightest of squints and frowns. But he’s still the center of a cooked-up cavalcade of souls.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 1, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I know we’re supposed to think that Besson’s daffy cinematic calisthenics are entertaining because at least they are not boring. But I was bored. It didn’t help that Morgan Freeman shows up as a brainy scientist explaining everything to us in his deepest intonations. When was the last time Freeman, a great actor, really acted?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 25, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Woody Allen’s Magic in the Moonlight is a “serious” movie attempting to be lighthearted. It deals with the same issues that Allen’s idol, Ingmar Bergman, often grappled with – namely, the battle zone of reason versus mysticism – but offhandedly.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 25, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Hoffman, bloated and flushed, does not look well in this film. But he is such a consummate actor that whatever infirmities he may have been fighting become a part of his performance. His portrayal, complete with a convincing German accent, is a fully rounded portrait of courage and dissolution.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 25, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 25, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
This is a movie of high innocence, set at a time in life when romantic love is still a frolic and the seaside is a balm that quells all ills.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 18, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s the ultimate time-travel movie into the future, a “flowing time sculpture,” in Linklater’s own words.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 18, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I found it immensely touching that these women found it in themselves to keep plugging away. Despite everything, they ended their days with a measure of peace and happiness.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 18, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Brit Marling, who starred in and co-wrote Cahill’s debut feature, “Another Earth,” is very good as Ian’s lab assistant and eventual wife, and a young Indian girl named Kashish, a nonactress I would guess, is unforgettable.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 18, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Braff plays Aidan with easygoing exasperation and Hudson is better than I’ve seen her since “Almost Famous.” As a director, Braff touches on lots of Big Themes: mortality, marriage, fatherhood, the disillusion of dreams. Nothing quite comes to full boil, though.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 18, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The documentary includes peerless clips of Billie Holiday and Lester Young from a TV show Hentoff coproduced as well as snatches of an interview with a young Bob Dylan, a clip of Hentoff on William Buckley’s “Firing Line” TV show, and lots more worth your time.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 11, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Berlinger is after more than a true crime recounting here – the film attempts to explain, often lucidly, sometimes laboriously, how deeply entrenched Bulger was with the FBI and the police.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 11, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
What’s striking about this new film is that it lays out the message-mongering in such a way that you can enjoy the movie equally well on a purely action level.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 11, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The film has a creepy allure but, as movies featuring full-bore sexual gamesmanship often do, it wears thin.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 5, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
His greatest legacy, however, as this film documents, was his courage in the endgame of his life.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 5, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The still youthful-looking Sarandon playing a grandmother is a jolt, especially since she doesn’t resemble the doddering roustabout she’s supposed to be playing. Maybe that’s why the director Ben Falcone (McCarthy’s husband and, with her, the film’s co-writer) gives Sarandon a full head of gray hair.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 2, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Most of the music is by New Radicals frontman Gregg Alexander, and it’s heartfelt without ever really touching the heart.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 27, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Who can really differentiate between these films anyway? In the end, they all devolve (evolve?) into clashing, clanging bots.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 27, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s a big movie, but in an emotional, not a historical, sense. Oftentimes it has the hushness of a chamber drama even when the world is its stage.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 20, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 20, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Rossi investigates the increasing use of massive open online courses and other flexible programs and talks to such education experts as Columbia professor Andrew Delbanco.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 13, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 13, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Cruise is better than he’s been in a while because he damps down his usual all-intensity-all-the-time MO. He’s best here when his character seems the most scared. And Emily Blunt as a commando legend is indomitable, a credit to her exoskeleton.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 6, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The ultimate feel-good movie about feeling bad. And within those limits, it succeeds all too well.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 6, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Night Moves may have a soft, almost dreamy feel, but at the core it’s crucially hard-headed. In its own quiet way, in how it pulls together our utopian ideals and home-grown fears, it’s the zeitgeist movie of the moment.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 30, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
In more ways than one, MacFarlane is trying to outgross Mel Brooks.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 30, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Director Robert Stromberg, making his debut as a director after supervising the visual effects for movies like “Alice in Wonderland” and “Avatar,” lacks the transcendent touch.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 30, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
One of the funniest and happiest movies I’ve ever seen about early adolescent girls and their wayward, fitful joyousness.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 30, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Words and Pictures is a minor effort from Schepisi, but minor Schepisi still trumps most of what’s out there.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 23, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s all third-rate “Pink Panther” stuff, and Brosnan, eager to play down his 007 bona fides, overcorrects.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 23, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 23, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I couldn’t follow many of the ins and outs of the time-travel scenario, and I’m not altogether sure that the filmmakers could, either. It doesn’t really matter. It’s enough that the movie is fun. We shouldn’t also expect it to make sense.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 22, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The Immigrant is reaching for the same thing that Fellini achieved in “La Strada” – the state of grace that arises between people who at first would seem to have nothing in common but desolation.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 16, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
This movie is altogether too nice. I prefer sports movies with more sass and snap, like the films Ron Shelton (“Bull Durham”) used to make, or even parts of “Moneyball.”- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 16, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Sometimes, oftentimes, trailers showcase only the good stuff. The actual movie is a pale substitute. Such is the case here.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 16, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Alarmist to an almost apocalyptic degree, the film is nevertheless packed with enough basic facts and figures to give any eater serious pause. Or at least any eater who indulges in sugar.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 9, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
There’s a pretty good movie buried somewhere deep inside the ungainly pastry that is Chef.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 9, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s gross, all right, but rarely funny – unless jokes about alcohol-laced breast milk is your thing.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 9, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Some of the human-interest stories are compelling, but too much of this film is as dry as a high school classroom presentation.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 2, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
What comes through so powerfully in this movie is a portrait of an entire generation making its way from death throes to new beginnings.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 2, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Overlong and repetitive as it is, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, at least delivers the goods.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 1, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
He uses Vacth, a beauty who somewhat resembles the young Nastassja Kinski or Dominique Sanda, for her eerie, implacable hauteur. There is a mask behind her mask.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 25, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Because most movies about Holocaust saviors feature Jews as victims rather than as rescuers, Walking With the Enemy, by contrast, has a special cachet. But the film is as dramatically inert as its origins are inspirational.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 25, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Puenzo may have started out to make something more ambitious than an intelligent, real-world horror thriller, but what she did achieve is still commendable. The melodramatics in this movie may be cooked up, but the fears it conjures are very real.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 25, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Practically every gag in this movie, and there are scores of them, is milked dry. When the gags aren’t very good to begin to with, this is a prescription for disaster.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 25, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Moderately entertaining, periodically draggy, Transcendence is not as wacky-visionary as “The Matrix,” or nearly as lyrical as “Her.”- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 18, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Firth is very good at playing racked men of high principle. He’s so well cast as Lomax that, at times, he’s almost too perfect in the role. He’s still the best thing about the movie.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 11, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Jim Jarmusch has made a vampire movie, but, as you might expect, not just any old vampire movie. “Twilight” fans will not be amused, but Jarmusch’s usual coterie of art-film followers will likely find the movie his best in years.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 11, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Although the cast, which also includes Jennifer Jason Leigh and Christine Lahti in sharp cameos, is very good, Wiig’s performance is self-effacing to a fault. Like a lot of comic actors, she overcompensates in dramatic roles by wearing a very long face.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 11, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
One of those stranger-than-fiction documentaries that just gets weirder and weirder as you’re watching it.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 4, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Although the movie goes way back into Rumsfeld’s career, it is the Iraq section that is the most noteworthy – and disappointing. Morris elicits virtually nothing revelatory from Rumsfeld.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 4, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s a flurry of good gags and bad. The good ones are worth sitting around for.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 4, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
If we must endure yet another spring-summer cycle of comic book superheroes, this movie at least delivers the wham-bang goods (recycled though they may be).- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Maier is a great artist who discounted adulation entirely. Her life was a masquerade; her genius, quite literally, was unexposed.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 28, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Biopics about civil rights icons are usually staid affairs. Cesar Chavez, directed by Diego Luna, is no exception.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 28, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Director and co-writer Emmanuelle Bercot doesn’t go in for a lot of plot, and the film’s one-thing-after-another trajectory, at least for a while, is engagingly shaggy.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 21, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Movies about doubles are, almost by definition, creepy, but Villeneuve, not to be outdone, piles on the weirdness. He’s big on spider imagery, but the web is flimsy.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 21, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The enchanting French-Belgian animated feature Ernest & Celestine is so liltingly sweet and graceful that, a day or two after I saw it, it seemed almost as if I had dreamed it.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 14, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 14, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Particle Fever doesn’t prompt us to say: “Gee, these superbrains are just like us, except for the brains.” The film allows for our awe. It also demonstrates that science is the most human of activities, with all that that implies.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 7, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Gustave’s protégé, the “lobby boy” Zero Moustafa (played as a young man by Tony Revolori and as an adult by F. Murray Abraham), is as much an enigma as Gustave.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 7, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The movie doesn’t delve especially deeply into the psychology of double-agentry, and the shifting viewpoints between Israelis and Palestinians flattens the drama instead of broadening it.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 7, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I’m not sure that anybody coming to this film to witness her for the first time would necessarily pledge eternal allegiance. Still, she’s sui generis, and in the theatre world, as in life (yes, there is an overlap), that counts for a lot.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 7, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The Lunchbox, the debut feature from Indian director Ritesh Batra, has such a sweet premise that I sincerely hope it doesn’t get remade with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 28, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The film works best as a straightforward melodrama set in an anything but straightforward world.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 28, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 28, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 21, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s not just Frankie who is putting on a show here. Berry is also overemphatically showing off her chops.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
There is no need for Murmelstein to break down here. In The Last of the Unjust, it’s as if the whole world is weeping.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 14, 2014
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 14, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s like an over-the-hill gang variant on “The Dirty Dozen,” except not as much fun as that sounds.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Feb 7, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s to Nathan’s credit that he doesn’t negate the allure of dirt-bike riding as an escape hatch from inner-city woes.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 31, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
We see him (Brolin) whip up a first-class chili, but his specialty is peach pie, which we watch him prepare so lovingly that I was surprised Reitman didn’t include the recipe in the end credits.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 31, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Gloria is a starting-over story that never quite picks up a head of steam. Lelio paces the action as a series of sketches, and the hit-or-miss quality of the material makes for a bumpy ride.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
I’ve never been able to figure out if Reggio is an artist or a con artist. Perhaps, in some ways, he’s both. He has claimed in interviews that he intended to make a movie about “the wonders of the universe.” Whatever he’s made, for better or worse, I’ve never seen anything quite like it.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Despite the film’s emphasis on Ryota’s transformation, the most piercing moment for me came in the scene in which his wife anguishes over her guilt in not realizing right away, as a mother, that Keita was not her birth son.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 17, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The Invisible Woman at its best does justice to the complicatedness of its characters – just as Dickens did as a writer.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
The emotional stakes are large-scale, and Farhadi honors them by delving into their intricacies.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
It’s a universal story that is also, by virtue of its very particular time and place, a singular experience.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Not much depth or political examination here. The film works best as a survivalist’s manual.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Peter Rainer
Streep’s performance has been criticized for being too theatrical, but that’s off the mark: The character she’s playing is supposed to be theatrical. She’s a woman playing a part – the ravaged matriarch.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 25, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The film is almost three hours long and precious little of it feels new – not from Scorsese or from anybody else.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 25, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The wistfulness in this movie is large-souled. Theodore may worry that his love for Samantha makes him a freak, but Amy knows that “anybody who loves is a freak.” All this may sound touchy-feely in the worst way, but Jonze is trying to get at how we seek romantic connection in this brave (or not so brave) new world. Like Theodore, he risks looking foolish.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 18, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The most inventive aspect of the film, aside from a lovely, daffy romantic duet between hypernerds played by Steve Carell and Kristen Wiig, are the promotional tie-ins with which we’ve been inundated -- Ron hawking Dodge Durango trucks, accepting journalism school awards, etc.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 18, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Interviewed in the film, Juárez journalist Sandra Rodriguez offers up this grim summation: “That these people represent the ideal of success, impunity, and limitless power is symptomatic of how defeated we are as a society.”- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Thompson is very good at playing imperious, and she even manages an unexpected trace of flirtiness in a few offhanded moments with Hanks.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The film suffers from late-stage Scorsese-itis – wacky, low-slung, high-octane melodrama with lots of yelling and overacting.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Most middle movies in a trilogy simply mark time. Not this one.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
What Tim’s Vermeer is really about is two geniuses, of very different sorts, communing across time and space.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
In top form, Joel and Ethan Coen offer up feel-bad experiences that, like fine blues medleys, make you feel good (although with an acidulous aftertaste). Inside Llewyn Davis is one of their best. So many movies are emblazoned with happy faces; this one wears its sadness, and its snarl, proudly.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Lee is very good at creating a sense of free-floating dread, but he, and his screenwriter Mark Protosevich, don’t have a real flair for pulp.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 27, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 22, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
At times the filmmakers seem to be taking potshots at Philomena for her placidity; other times Martin is made to seem crass and unfeeling – insufficiently spiritual. Life lessons are imparted, although the players never budge very much from their initial attitudes.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 22, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
As teencentric franchises go, I much prefer The Hunger Games to the blessedly expired “Twilight” films. For one thing, they employ much better actors. My favorite: Amanda Plummer, one of the best and most underused actresses in America, as one of the Quell contestants.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Director Wladyslaw Pasikowski has made the mistake of going about his business as if he were fashioning a horror film.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 15, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s a filmmaker’s conceit. These filmmakers may come from Nebraska, but, from the looks of things, they don’t want to be spending much time there.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 15, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 8, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The fierce, questing intelligence of these students and educators is a perfect match for Wiseman’s own.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 8, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
His movie is visually as beautiful as anything he’s ever done. Conceptually, it’s muddled. The collision between poetic fancifulness and grim reality, between peace and war, never falls into focus. Miyazaki has seized on a great theme only to soft-pedal it.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 8, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
My favorite moment in the movie: Astrophysicist Erik Selvig (Stellan Skarsgard) insisting on wearing only his underwear because he says he thinks better that way. Hey, whatever works.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 8, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
By the film’s end, the main protagonists have become more philosophical, if no less ardent, about the future of Egypt. “We are not looking for a leader,” Hassan declares. “We are looking for a conscience.” He has only to look in the mirror.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
There’s a creepy subtext to all this, especially when Tim uses his time-travel gifts to woo an American girl without her assent.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s still a bit early in the long careers of these actors, especially Kline, to be playing creaky codgers. It’s bad enough when Hollywood casts women over the age of 30 as grandmothers-in-waiting. Now we have to endure an onslaught of famous veteran actors complaining about their hips.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The real halo here belongs to McConaughey. He does justice to Ron’s story and to his own quicksilver talent.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 25, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Director and co-writer John Krokidas doesn’t have a very fluent gift for period re-creation – everything seems stagy – and most of the actors, playing divas of various stripes, overact.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 25, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Despite the film’s intentions, Idris and Seun can’t really stand in for anybody but themselves. What they go through, as middle-class kids in a privileged school system, seems far less race-based than the filmmakers would have us believe.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 25, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The omnipresent Benedict Cumberbatch plays Assange, stringy white-gray hair flowing, and Daniel Brühl is Domscheit-Berg. Condon and his screenwriter Josh Singer don’t quite know what to make of this duo, perhaps because the men didn’t quite know what to make of each other, either.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 18, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
If one buys into the whole grace under pressure thing, All Is Lost – the title is its own spoiler alert – is first-rate.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 18, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
I wish the truly searing moments in this film were not continually counterbalanced by an overall historical-reenactment stiffness in the presentation.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 18, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Peirce is gifted, but she lacks the ability of directors like DePalma to transform schlock into something deeply personal.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 18, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Hailee Steinfeld’s Juliet is rather lovely and rather bland; Douglas Booth’s Romeo might have stepped out of a special Renaissance Faire edition of GQ.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
I wish the film had probed more deeply into why anybody would face those odds. George Mallory’s “Because it’s there” has never quite cut it for me.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
I almost wish Cuarón had cast nonactors, or unknown actors, in the lead roles. It’s jarring having movie stars work up their Hollywood histrionics against such a glorious backdrop. None of these arguments should dissuade you from seeing Gravity, if only because what’s good about it is so much better than what’s bad. Visually, if not imaginatively, it sends you soaring.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s unseemly, I know, to praise a movie like this for the stand-up-comic affability of its host. But Reich’s engagingness also gives credence to the seriousness of his message. He’s all about fairness, and, in his demeanor, as well as in his presentation, he embodies that ideal.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The cinematography by Bradford Young is rich-toned and lustrous, and the film, until it bogs down in melodramatics, has a sensual ease. We are not looking at these people from the outside. Dosunmu pulls us deep inside.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
True love beckons in the guise of a dingbat played by Julianne Moore and all is right with the world. As Jon’s father, a man whose lifeblood is yelling, Tony Danza is very funny. He makes you understand what his son is escaping from.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
I kept expecting Sacha Baron Cohen to traipse onto the scene. Alas, he doesn’t.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Rush isn’t bad, exactly, but it’s like a standard-issue male action programmer that somehow crept in from an earlier era.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
For all its pretensions and intermittent power, is essentially high-grade claptrap.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
You get a strong whiff of what it must have been like to be Johnny Cash, or his exasperated manager, from this film. It would make a good companion piece to “Walk the Line.”- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 13, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s a truism, reinforced here, that actors often are the last to comprehend how they do what they do. No matter. What they give us is all that counts.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 13, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
We get to see film of daughter Tricia’s wedding (her father is a surprisingly agile ballroom dancer) and other oddities. We also hear more of the famous audiotapes than usual. You’ll be interested to know that Nixon, not in praise, referred to Henry Kissinger as a “swinger.”- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The film’s title is derived from a magical black stone of Persian lore that reputedly absorbs the burdens of those who speak to it until it crumbles – freeing the speaker of her troubles.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 23, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Tony Leung plays Ip Man, the real-life kung fu innovator who most famously trained Bruce Lee. His life takes in the upheavals in China from the 1930s through the ’50s, including the Japanese occupation.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 23, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Ungainly and overly ambitious, The Butler tries to encompass too much history within too narrow a framework.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 16, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Thematically at least, it’s like a John Ford movie with pickup trucks. But everything plays out with a sodden deliberateness, as if something mythic were going on. No such luck.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 16, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Their 40-year marriage seems like more of a trial than this overweening, lightly likable movie acknowledges.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 16, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Blomkamp overdoes even his best effects. (I would have welcomed more vistas of Elysium to break up the grungefest.) If Elysium is an example of how recession-era Hollywood intends to dramatize the rift between the haves and the have-nots, let’s hope the studios don’t also bring back Smell-O-Rama.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 9, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The blue humor in We’re the Millers is just bland. And yes, Aniston performs a (modified) striptease. That’s pretty bland, too.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 7, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s essentially a buddy-cop romp with the usual assortment pack of graphic gruesomeness.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 2, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
James Ponsoldt, who directed from a script by Michael H. Weber and Scott Neustadter, is a bit too glib to do justice to this material, but the young actors, especially Woodley, are quite fine.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 2, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s a miniature art history lesson that is also a rapt communion between two people who, at least in this moment, are joined in the ecstasy of creation.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Aug 2, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Mangold front-loads the action, but near the end there’s a first-rate fight atop a bullet train between Wolverine/Logan and some especially pesky ninjas. It puts the train fights in the recent “The Lone Ranger” to shame.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 26, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Allen is content to have Jasmine, babbling to herself, waft into a psychoneurotic, Antonioni-esque haze that seems preordained by her class and her predicament. Her cry for help, if you wipe away all the artifice, resembles nothing so much as a plea for her charge cards to be reinstated.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 26, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The effect is intended to be ghastly – which it certainly is – but I was equally repelled by this film’s conceit. Oppenheimer allows murderous thugs free rein to preen their atrocities, and then fobs it all off as some kind of exalted art thing. This is more than an aesthetic crime; it’s a moral crime.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 26, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
I kept wishing that Still Mine had jettisoned the film’s true-story trappings and moved more deeply into the Craig-Irene duet unencumbered by bad-news bulletins from the building inspectors. Easily the best parts of the film are those in which husband and wife quietly summon up in often the barest of glances and touches a near-lifetime together.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 19, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
One glaring question the film doesn’t raise: Why, given his history, is Tilikum still entertaining in sea parks?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 19, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 19, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s nice to see oldsters cavorting in kaboom movies, but a little of this stuff goes a long way.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 19, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The subject matter, already troubling, is made even more so by Vinterberg’s almost sadomasochistic penchant for propping up Lucas’s martyrdom. He’s gunning for prey, too.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 12, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The Kaijus make zombies look like wusses, so at least the fights in this film are battles royal. But overload sets in early, and it all turns into battle boring.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 12, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The only character in the film who seems to have the requisite gravity is Oscar’s mother, Wanda (the marvelous Octavia Spencer), whose scene with her son in San Quentin is as hard-bitten as the rest of the film isn’t.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 12, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Hammer plays the Lone Ranger as a clueless, stolid square, and the resulting contrast with Depp’s cartoonishness isn’t odd-couple funny, just blah.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jul 2, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
As this film demonstrates in so many ways, the intractability of the Arab-Israeli political situation is, to put it mildly, not easily resolved, least of all onscreen.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
This farce set mostly aboard a transatlantic flight stuck in midair never launches.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Tatum muscles his way through the role with panache, while Foxx never gets a chance to break loose.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s not really such a great achievement to have women cops in the movies acting as boorish and rowdy as their male counterparts, especially since the movie seems designed for a sequel. But then again, what movie these days – or at least this summer – isn’t?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
His (Lindholm) steadfast, unvarying gaze has its own authenticity. He’s made a thriller that thrills while also respecting our intelligence.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 21, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Here’s a valuable moviegoing rule: Just because you use up an entire handful of hankies doesn’t mean a movie’s great. But Stamp and Redgrave are the real deal.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 21, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Keep your ears tuned for Helen Mirren as the imperious Dean Hardscrabble. Hogwarts would have loved her.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 21, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Director Marc Forster is very good at amping up the terror, but after a while, we reach zombie overload and we might as well be watching an infestation of Transformers.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 21, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
I have rarely seen a movie that better expressed the revivifying nature of music. (Many of the women, not surprisingly, grew up singing gospel in church choirs and had preachers for parents.)- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 14, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
This is a movie that cries out for more than the too-cool-for-school Coppola’s trademark hipster anomie. She may be too much a part of the celebrity-mongering world she portrays to do justice to its injustices.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 14, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Taking a cue from the “Batman” series, the film is dark and thudding and overlong.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
I enjoyed Whedon’s film both as a species of stunt and also as a legitimately entertaining entry in the voluminous Shakespeare adaptation sweepstakes.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 7, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
I wish Rowley didn’t so often dabble in standard movie-thriller-style stylistics, but his film is an exposé of practices that need – demand – exposing.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 7, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
There’s a potentially good comedy to be made about old-school guys trying to make a go of it in a youth-dominated digital marketplace, but director Shawn Levy and screenwriter Jared Stern overdose on moronic excursions.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jun 7, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Implicit in this film is a simple truth: The sheer force of artistry has the power to convert outsiders into insiders. I left Fill the Void feeling privileged, however briefly, to have been brought into this world.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 31, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
There is nothing magical about seeing one’s umpteenth car chase. Mark Ruffalo plays the weirdly scruffy FBI agent on the case, while Morgan Freeman, in super-slow mode, plays a famous magic debunker. He’d make the ideal critic for this movie.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 31, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s impossible to take this movie seriously, certainly not as seriously as it takes itself.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 31, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 31, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Director Chris Wedge falls into the common animator’s trap of making the “human” characters a lot duller than the nonhuman creepy-crawlies.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 24, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The results are far more exciting than most Hollywood espionage thrillers.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 24, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Before Midnight is the fullest and richest and saddest of the three movies in the trilogy. Make it a quartet, I say.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 24, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The tonal problem of the second installment, which often resembled a drug-infested pulp thriller instead of a comedy, is also problematic here.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The Canadian actress and director Sarah Polley set out to make a straightforward documentary about her mother, Diane, who died when she was 11, but by the time Stories We Tell was finished five years later, it had become unclassifiable.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 17, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
It’s a skimpy, overextended riff, but some of the seemingly tossed-off moments are lovely.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 17, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The most pressing question I took away from the film is, Are they really still teaching "A Tale of Two Cities" in honors English classes?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 17, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Since 9/11-style terrorism is very much on display here, I suppose it’s fair to say that Star Trek Into Darkness is a sci-fi blow-out with overtones of the real. Series founder Gene Roddenberry would, I think, approve.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 16, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
One of those documentaries that is more testimonial than investigation.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 10, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The slapstick is often clunky, but Robinson has a sweet jester’s disposition that keeps many of the gags from collapsing.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 10, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The Great Gatsby isn’t simply a classic American text: In Luhrmann’s hands, it’s also the greatest self-help manual ever written.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The film stands quite well on its own. The directors have made the right, essential decision to make the movie almost entirely from Maisie’s point of view.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 3, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Assayas doesn’t bring out the fiery best in this material, but he’s smart enough to know that revolutionaries like their comforts as much as the ruling class does.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 3, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The film’s political scope is wide, beginning in 1917 and extending for sixty years, and, especially in the first hour or so, the antic, magical tone of Rushdie’s novel is sustained.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 3, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The action, directed by Shane Black, ranges from passable to interminable. The plot goes from clang to bang. Downey Jr. is still the best thing about this series.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted May 3, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
In the House does at least engage us. It even enlists us implicitly as co-conspirators in Claude’s devious storytelling.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Is Malick deliberately courting self-parody here? Probably not. That would imply he had a sense of humor.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Is it possible to truly start life all over again? Arthur Newman might have been better if it had not started at all.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Timeliness is certainly on the side of Mira Nair’s uneven but fascinating The Reluctant Fundamentalist.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The film itself vaporizes before your eyes, but it’s likable. Given its unstable mishmash of thuggery and whimsy, that’s something of an achievement.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
The filmmaking is TV-movie-of-the-week dull and Robinson’s ordeal is hammered home to the exclusion of virtually everything else in his life.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Boyle loads his movie with so many snazzy effects that we lose sight of what it all means – if anything. His showoffiness confuses.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 5, 2013
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 5, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Equal parts preachy and melodramatic, The Company You Keep never quite figures out what it wants to be.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Apr 5, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Although simpler and less mysterious than the great Hayao Miyazaki movies, the gently melancholic From Up on Poppy Hill is still a must see at a time when family entertainment is too often synonymous with blandness.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 29, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Renoir at least looks like a great movie. If you want a full-scale immersion in this material, I recommend “Renoir, My Father,” Jean Renoir’s wonderful 1958 biography. This book is the touchstone for all matters Renoir, both père and fils.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 29, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Coming on the heels of the Taviani brothers’ quasi-documentary “Caesar Must Die,” about the staging of “Julius Caesar” in a maximum-security lockup, Reality gives credence to the notion that Italian prisons are hotbeds of acting talent.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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- Peter Rainer
Granted, this is not automatic laugh-riot material, nor should it be, but didn’t Fey recognize how hackneyed it all is? Does being a movie star mean blanding out everything that makes you special?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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